Mayor of Baltimore v. Himmel

107 A. 522, 135 Md. 65, 1919 Md. LEXIS 112
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 107 A. 522 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Himmel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Baltimore v. Himmel, 107 A. 522, 135 Md. 65, 1919 Md. LEXIS 112 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore instituted proceedings for the condemnation in fee of eleven pieces of property for use in connection with the establishment by the City of a Civic Centre. A portion of the property was subject to ground rent. By their inquisition the jury found that the damages which would be sustained by the owners of the *67 entire property by the taking, use and occupation by the City to be $283,500.00. The value of the ground rents (which was fixed by agreement and about which there is no question in this ease) was found to be $15,230.00. The balance, $268,270.00, was awarded to the other owners. The appeal before us was taken from the judgment entered on the inquisition by the Baltimore City Court.

The property condemned is located in the block bounded by Frederick, Lexington, Harrison and Fayette streets, and contains about one-half of the block. Eight pieces of this property are improved arid three are unimproved. The entire property condemned was used and occupied by the appellees as a manufacturing plant for the manufacture of furniture: The business was an old, well established and quite

an extensive one. The property is located in a manufacturing section of the City, on good streets, and of easy access to wharves and railroads. The buildings are well adapted to the land and the locality, and are so connected up as to enable the owners to use them all as useful and separate units in the prosecution of their business. Expensive and suitable machinery was installed upon the property — boilers, engines, a sprinkler and heating system, shafting, motors, elevators, electric wiring, plumbing, etc. Some of this mechanical equipment was permanently attached to the soil, and others of it could not, be detached without greatly injuring' it. The evidence shows that the appellees were the owners of a large, valuable and well equipped manufacturing plant.

For the disposition of the legal questions presented by the record it will be sufficient to deal with the evidence according to its general purport and effect, as it relates to the qirestions to be decided. The method pursued by the City to prove the present fair market value of the property taken was this: It called competent real estate experts, who first valued each separate piece of land, and then gave their opinion as to how much the value of each lot was enhanced by the improvements, and stated fully the reasons upon which their valuations were based. This method of arriving at the value *68 of the property was made very clear from the following extract from the testimony of Harry E. Gilbert, the first witness called by the City. After testifying to the value of each lot as unimproved and to the amount the improvement thereon added to each lot, he testified that: “The aggregate of his land value is $36,835. He thought that the added value which the improvements gave to the property was $107,150, without reference to the sprinkling system. He considered that the latter gave another added value of $5,500 and that the boiler house gave an added value of. $500, making the aggregate value of the property in fee $150,230. He had reached this conclusion through sales in the neighborhood and had considered rentals and his knowledge of what buildipgs added to the land values, what they are worth on the market. He had not given or attempted to give any. construction value of the buildings or a reproduction value. The reason for this was that it .was his experience and the experience of every real estate man (and it is acknowledged) that that process will not give one the value of the land plus old buildings; because there are other things that enter into the value of property that depreciate the property. There is a thing that is very vital and important known as economic depreciation, independent of'structural depreciation.” Charles iST. Boulden, the other real estate expert for the City, adopted the same method of valuation, and “gave his judgment as to the value of the’ land in each separate lot, these figures aggregating $38,320.83, and testified that he considered the building added to the value of the property an aggregate of $105,300, making the aggregate value of the property $143,620.83. Deducting the value of the ground rents, as agreed upon, $15,320, the -value of the Himmel interests in the property was $128,390.83. He testified that he reached these conclusions from other sales in the neighborhood in comparison with the land value and values of the buildings on the property. Then he checked it up by comparison with rental value.” Richard R. Pue testified that': “He considered the fee simple value for the property $135,- *69 596, and that the interest of the Himmels, after deducting the capitalization of the ground rent, to be worth $120,366. The land value alone he considered to be $34,010. It was his opinion that the buildings added $101,586 to the value of the, land. After an inspection of the property and a consideration of its location, he compared that information with sales of other properties, which he analyzed, and with their rental values. And to this information he applied his experience as real estate man and reached the conclusion stated.” Neither of these witnesses placed any value on the machinery or other mechanical equipment other than that mentioned by Mr. Gilbert. Those witnesses furnished the principal evidence on the part of the City to prove the value of the property taken. Mr. Gilbert valued the entire interest in fee at $150,230.00; Mr. Boulden at $148,390.83, and Mr. Pue’s valuation was $135,596.00.

The landowners pursued, in one respect, a totally different method of arriving at the fair value of the property. They called James Carey Martien, William E. Eerguson, and Charles EL Steffey, each competent real estate experts, and each gave his valuation of the land embraced in the condemnation. Mr. Martien valued it at $72,877.00 in fee; Mr. Eerguson at $68,328.32; Mr. Steffey at $73,910.00. Mr. Martien and Mr. Steffey said the buildings upon the property were well adapted to the land and the surroundings, and that the property’was being used for its highest utility. These witnesses, although familiar with the character of the buildings, expressed no opinion as to the amount they added to the value of the land, bxxt said their structxxral value represented a .fairly proportionate enhancement in the market value of the land, and that the accurate or best, method to determine the valxxe of the property, where it was improved as this was to its highest utility, is to ascertain throxxgh the real estate broker the value of the ground, and through the builders the value of the improvements. The appellees then called Otto G. Simonson, an architect of high qualifications and wide experience in his profession, and K. B. Mason, a con *70 tractor and builder of forty years’ experience. Each of these witnessed was familiar with the buildings upon the land, and each testified as to the structural or reproduction value at the present time, with what they considered due allowance for depreciation. Mr. Simonson estimated the reproduction value to be $255,351.42, and Mr. Mason’s valuation was $287,532.11. Other witnesses, upon the same principle, fixed a value upon the boilers, engines and other items of equipment which the appellees claimed to be fixtures.

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Bluebook (online)
107 A. 522, 135 Md. 65, 1919 Md. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-himmel-md-1919.